(Not) Alone is a quiet, intimate literary novel about existing in a world that feels calibrated for someone else.
Moving through fragmented moments, interior monologue, and carefully observed details, the story follows Henry, who experiences life through heightened awareness, nonlinear thought, and constant internal negotiation.
Conversations linger too long.
Silence speaks loudly.
Meaning hides in repetition, texture, and the things people do not say.
Rather than offering a single arc toward resolution, the novel honors how connection is built in pieces. Through memory, routine, misunderstanding, and small acts of recognition, (Not) Alone explores what it means to belong without assimilation, to be understood without translation, and to accept that companionship does not always look like closeness.
Written with restraint and emotional precision, this is a book for readers who live in the margins of social rhythm, who notice patterns others overlook, and who understand that solitude and connection are not opposites but often coexist.
(Not) Alone does not explain neurodivergence. It inhabits it.